Walking Tours in Scotland is good to go
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Image credit: Walking Tours in Scotland Article published 27/07/2021
The way in which businesses have reopened to continue to provide a safe environment for customers and staff has been critically important – there s a lot to consider. We caught up with Liv Barber, co-founder of Walking Tours in Scotland, to find out how the business is adapting and reassuring customers it s good to go.
Could you tell us about Walking Tours in Scotland and your role within the business? I’m Liv Barber, co-founder and director of Walking Tours in Scotland – we provide walking tours in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Inverness, Stirling and St Andrews. Our tours are a led by local guides, who are passionate about immersing our guests in each city s culture and history. In Glasgow we offer our biggest range of tours, from stunning Street Art to Dark History – there is something for everyone!
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09/04/2021 08:45
Bellocq Tea Atelier
Nueva York, Estados Unidos.
En la vorágine neoyorquina de tiendas, espectáculos y aglomeraciones existe un refugio donde tomarse un descanso. El Bellocq Tea Atelier es un templo del relax donde explorar una extensa colección de tés de hojas sueltas y mezclas de hierbas (todas ellas se ensamblan a mano), los más exóticos inciensos japoneses y una gran oferta de regalos artesanales del mundo. Los fundadores de esta tienda/tetería, Heidi Johannsen Stewart y Michael Shannon, se conocieron mientras trabajaban en una marca de estilo de vida. “Viajábamos por todo el mundo comprando té y compartiéndolo con los demás”, explican. Los tés de Bellocq son cuidadosamente seleccionados: proceden de plantaciones de China, Japón, India, Nepal, Taiwán, Sri Lanka, Vietnam y Malawi, son exclusivamente de hoja entera, casi enteramente orgánicas y proceden de jardines de gran altura.
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BY the time French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte set up the 1806 trade blockade that halted the supply of silk to Britain, Paisley had already established itself as a textile centre home to thousands of weavers. But that attempt to cripple British trade triggered an innovation that would turn the town into a manufacturing powerhouse. Within years, Paisley was home to the third largest corporation in the world and its eponymous pattern had become iconic. More than 200 years on from Bonaparte’s blockade, the town no longer produces the cloth but local leaders hope to pull on those threads to weave a new story after years of commercial decline and industrial drift forced a strategic rethink of what makes a town. The result is an overarching regeneration plan to make culture king in the home of John Byrne, Gerry Rafferty, David Tennant and Paolo Nutini.